Wildland Partners may choose to give monthly or quarterly. The amount you specify will be automatically deducted from your bank account or credit card each month or quarter for as long as you choose to stay enrolled. Giving levels from as little as $10 to as much as you want are available. Your membership is renewed automatically every year, and you receive a convenient tax letter for your records.

Automatic transfers are safe and secure. Your support provides stable year-round funding to keep the Northwest wild, and you don’t have to renew annually.

What other Wildland Partners say:

Paul and Pat Martin, Wildland Partners since 2010

For Paul and Pat, the convenience of the program is why they joined. “It was easy, the monthly deduction,” Paul said. “Instead of making one or two larger donations a year, we are making multiple small donations.”

Paul supports our work because he believes maintaining habitat for wildlife is vital in this time of rapidly increasing human populations. “I like to at least pretend there is a little bit of wild land left, the frontier and all of that,” Paul said. And with his monthly donation to our work, we are doing our best to make sure that Paul doesn’t have to pretend.

Richard and Elsie Zarnowitz, Wildland Partners since 2001

Long-time environmentalists and opponents of sprawl, Richard and Elsie Zarnowitz also became members because they support wild lands conservation. Elsie said they decided to become Wildland Partners because their monthly donations provide us with the comfort of knowing their support will consistently be there.

Julie Carpenter, Wildland Partner

Julie Carpenter became a Wildland Partner not necessarily for the convenience or for the community programs we offer, but because it makes her feel like she is empowering the Conservation Northwest staff to do the work she doesn’t have time to fit into her busy schedule. “I get a bit of relief knowing that while I’m not able to stay on top of the many regional issues of importance to preserving the eco-health of the great Pacific Northwest, Conservation Northwest is doing just that.”

“Since extinction is forever, and since government, the economy, and so many people conspire to value continued exploitation of natural resources over conservation, it’s just critically important that we push back to preserve what we can,” Julie said.